No. AB- is the rarest blood type and is not a universal recipient. Those who would be considered universal recipients are those with an AB+ blood type.
AB negative
ab
The four blood types are A, B, AB, and O. The universal donor is O and the universal recipient is AB
The universal recipient blood type is AB. This blood type can receive A, B, AB, or O type bloods.
AB+ is the universal recipient.
yes
Of course! Type O- is the universal donor and AB+ is the universal recipient.
blood type AB=universal blood recipient as it can receive any types ofblood. blood type O=universal blood donor as any types of blood can receivethe O type.
Type AB POSITIVE is the universal red cell transfusion recipient. For plasma tranfusions, group O is the universal recipient.
If you are AB positive (AB+ is universal receiver for positive blood group) then you can receive blood from A+, B+ & O+ & if you are AB negative then you cn receive blood from A-, B- & O-.
A universal donor can donate to any blood type. The only universal donor is 0 negative because it doesn't have an antigens. Antigens are things that fight off foreign objects in your body, like white blood cells. A universal recipient can receive any type of blood. The only universal recipient is AB positive.
AB positive; a person with rhesus-negative blood can have an adverse reaction if given rhesus-positive blood.